My Surface Book 2 is quite long in the tooth at this point, windows drags on it but I imagine linux would fly. I'm surprised to see such extensive support for it.
I know the username and password, I forgot the instance. I registered through an app so the login details were saved on my keychain but the keychain points to the app, not the instance.
I'm not saying I can't figure it out and do it better next time, but on Twitter if you forget your password you just push a button and then reset it. On mastodon if you forget your instance you're SOL. With Lemmy I know I'm on the big main instance and it's not a concern anymore.
We all thought that the 5th one would be the significant redesign.
Personally I like the form factor of the 4 and don't need it to be too different. I really like being able to hold it in one hand when closed, which I can't do with many other slab phones these days. I wouldn't mind it being like 1mm wider, but that's it.
I made ana count on some mastodon instance. It wasnt a deliberate decision, I just picked one that seemed interesting from a list. That's what people recommended: find a small instance, don't go to the big ones. Well now I don't know what the instance was called, so I can't log back in because I don't know how to find it again.
When I went to try Lemmy I made of point of signing up for the biggest, most popular, instance, and I can use it in a straight forward way without worrying too much about federation. In general though Lemmy has been much more straightforward than Mastodon, which I gave up on after about 3 days, and then never used again because I couldn't remember where I had registered.
I learned vim first, and I genuinely have no idea how to use the user friendly editors like nano or whatever. I'm not a developer, but I know how to :wq.
Damn I should have gotten you to paint our house. Our painter just did a half assed job and started yelling at me when I pointed out lines that weren't straight or paint splatters from the accent wall on the white wall. He also used the wrong gloss of paint in places and created these shiny patches throughout the house.
And I have to look at this every day until I decide to repaint again. Just a bit more care and effort on his part would have prevented me from being mildly annoyed every day for the next however many years.
(I ended up painting over the glossy stuff myself)
Chargers are not like gas stations. Most people will do the vast majority of their charging at home. I only use a public charger when I am doing a road trip. And even then, I still have the option of using Electrify America or Chargepoint chargers. So yes, it would be amazing for me to access the supercharger network if it allows for a more efficient route than relying only on Electrify America, but realistically I would only be charging there once or twice a year, maybe $30 each time.
Hyundai and Toyota aren't investing in EVs like they should. Kia and Hyundai are way ahead. The Hyundai Ioniq 5 is what the BZ4X hopes it will be in 4 years. The Hyundai has a more advanced battery and better overall performance, and it looks better.
The supercharger grid is going away as an advantage. Also, if you bought last year, a Model Y was starting at $67,000. I almost bought one, and I'm so, so, so glad that I didn't.
These aren't designed for homes. Three phase power exists in the US for commercial customers that set up fast chargers. I grew up in Europe and we had three phase power for our residential AC as well.
Why would you assume 240V? Maybe im missing something, but I charge my Ioniq 5 at 170kW all the time. 230kW on more powerful chargers. The grid seems okay with it.
Very intersting thanks for the heads up.
My Surface Book 2 is quite long in the tooth at this point, windows drags on it but I imagine linux would fly. I'm surprised to see such extensive support for it.